2021
February
08
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 08, 2021
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Can the SETI Institute, in a bid to send a message to the universe, send one to Earth’s residents as well?

That’s the hope of the Earthling Project, a collaboration of the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) Institute artist-in-residence Felipe Pérez Santiago, and the Arch Mission Foundation. At a moment when earthlings often raise their voices in divisive ways, the project invites “all humanity” to tell the universe who they are by raising their voices in a common language: song. 

It works like this: Everyone who calls the Blue Marble home can record themselves crooning up to three 30-second tunes via the Earthling Project app. Mr. Santiago, a musician and composer, will meld those voices together, and the resulting composition will be launched into space and distributed on Earth later this year. 

It’s reminiscent of the Golden Record, a project led by astrophysicist Carl Sagan and placed aboard the Voyager spacecraft in 1977. Then, the focus was the diversity of Earth, presented in a disc of images, natural sounds, and greetings in 55 languages. Sagan said “the launching of this bottle into the cosmic ocean says something very hopeful about life on this planet.”

So too in 2021, as the Earthling Project’s scientists and artists invite people to join in musical tributes to their shared earthly address and humanity. “We face challenges that have to be solved by cooperating across the globe,” SETI co-founder Jill Tarter told The Economist.

“If we can send this unified message,” Mr. Santiago said, “our mission is accomplished.”


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

A common thread emerges in many recent political headlines: questions over whether the right to free speech is being abused in dangerous ways – or, alternatively, whether it’s being unfairly stifled.

Essay

Almost inevitably, reporters make human connections, which contribute perspective. For the Monitor’s Scott Peterson, that connection took a “statistic” from a tragic Kabul story and gave it a sense of personal loss.

Courtesy of Jimmy's foster parent
A young boy we're calling Jimmy reads with his foster parent at her home in Illinois. The pandemic has put extra pressure on the foster care system, delaying court hearings and family reunifications.

The pandemic has sharply exacerbated long-standing difficulties in the foster care system. But it has also tapped into reservoirs of capability and compassion in children and adults alike.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
The nameplate for The Boston Globe hangs outside the paper's headquarters in downtown Boston, Feb. 3, 2021. The Globe is joining a small but growing number of news outlets that are considering requests from people to update or remove identifying details from stories that deal with lesser crimes or misdemeanors.

What are the ethics for news publications around updating or hiding old stories that dog people online? More outlets are looking empathetically at individuals’ requests – and weighing standards for how to treat them.

Film

Courtesy of Desmond Ovbiagele
Two actresses in the Nigerian film "The Milkmaid" portray young women on the night they are forcefully wedded to militants. The movie highlights the experiences of kidnapped women and girls.

Art expresses the things we care about most as individuals, but also as societies. So the debate about what art should be “allowed” is similarly telling: What topics are so urgent, so sensitive, that censors feel a need to clamp down?


The Monitor's View

In recent days, one of the world’s worst conflicts – the six-year war in Yemen – has taken a turn for the better with a flurry of diplomacy. President Joe Biden appointed the first special U.S. envoy for Yemen, saying the conflict has created a humanitarian “catastrophe.” A high-level delegation from the European Union arrived in the country Saturday. And the United Nations special envoy for Yemen, Martin Griffiths, is on his first visit to Iran for talks about its role in the war.

With such high-powered mediators at work, can peace finally come to this corner of the Arabian Peninsula and end near-famine conditions for many in Yemen?

One reason for optimism is that the military side of the war is at a stalemate. The United States has cut off military support for the Saudi forces involved in the conflict. And Iran, which could be seeking better ties with the U.S., may be willing to end its support of the Houthi rebels who control most of the country. The tools of mediation are the only way to end this war.

The two main factions inside Yemen “need nudging,” said Mr. Griffiths in a recent speech. “They need to be supported. They need to be advised, let us be honest.”

He was able to get both sides to meet last year and agree to an exchange of prisoners, a huge step toward trust-building. More than a thousand prisoners are now back with their loved ones. The sense of each life being important was clearly demonstrated in the agreement, Mr. Griffiths said, giving some hope for further agreements.

Globe-trotting interlocutors like him have a knack for getting both sides to develop an appreciation for the needs and fears of each other. They bring humble listening for shared concerns and then use moral persuasion to convince each side to examine its own actions and attitudes.

The immediate needs are for a nationwide cease-fire and access for urgent humanitarian measures. A next step is for the Houthi movement to be turned into a political party that seeks its interests through peaceful means. Saudi Arabia and Iran also need to cease using Yemen as a proxy battleground for their competing visions for the Middle East.

Both of those countries are facing the same trends among their young people. “For too long, the image of the Middle East has been a negative one of violence, radicalism, fanaticism, and wars combined with the extremes of excessive wealth and abject poverty, corruption and dictatorships. This has been changing in the last decade with the rise of a globalized new generation that is protesting against that reality and the influence of Iranian-sponsored militias,” writes Nadim Shehadi of Lebanese American University in Eurasia Review.

One role for mediators in Yemen is to persuade each side that peace talks need not be a zero-sum game. If the level of diplomacy is any sign, that point is starting to add up.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

Sometimes self-improvement can seem a daunting goal. But considering our nature as children of God is an empowering starting point for character growth and progress.


A message of love

Francisco Seco/AP
Young people pile on for a sled run after a snowfall at the Woluwe park in Brussels on Feb. 8, 2021. Freezing temperatures and snow have swept across much of Europe.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Tomorrow, join us as correspondent Jeffrey MacDonald looks at what’s happened as church services have had to go online. Turns out, practicing religion in cyberspace works. 

More issues

2021
February
08
Monday

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